3584 Chapter 29 



Table 29-1. — Summary tabulation of illustrations in chapter 29 — continued 



Group or subject Figure number 



Furniture and otiier remanufactured products 



Furniture, household 29-26 



Furniture, office and public 29-27 



Partitions and fixtures 29-28 



Kitchen cabinets 29-29 



Ship and boat building and repair, and for agricultural implements . . . 29-30 



Industrial pattens, signs and displays 29-31 



Burial caskets 29-32 



Sporting goods, musical instruments, toys and games 29-33 



Travel trailers and campers 29-34 



Brooms and brushes; handles 29-35AB 



Plywood and veneer 29-36ABC 



Excelsior and wood flour (see fig. 22-70) — 



PRICES- 



Stumpage 



Hardwood pulpwood 29-37 



Hardwood saw timber (oak) 29-38 



Southern pine^ 29-39 



Douglas-fir 29-40 



Pulpwood and pulpchips 



Pulpwood 29-41AB 



Pulpchips (see also fig. 25-2) 29-42 



Lumber 



Hardwood lumber, price history 29-43ABC 



Hardwood lumber, predicted price to 2005"^ 29-44 



Crossties and No. 2 Common oak 29-45 



Southern pine and Douglas-fir 29-46 



Plywood 



Hardwood and softwood plywood 29-47 



Paper and paperboard 



Unbleached kraft linerboard, southern 29-48 



Energy 



Natural gas 29-49 



Electrical 29-50 



'For a discussion of the national supply and demand for hardwoods in 1970 and 2000, see section 

 2-1 and figures 2-1 and 2-2. Survey data specific to hardwood on southern pine sites are given in 

 section 2-6. Ownership patterns are discussed in section 2-9. 



^Foradiscussionof land values see: deSteiger, J. E. 1982. Forestland market values. J. of For. 80 

 (4): 214-216. 



•'For data on regional price variation see: Hunter, T. P. 1982. Regional price variation of southern 

 pine sawtimber and pulpwood. For. Prod. J. 32 (9): 23-26. 



'^See also: Luppold, W.G. 1982. An econometric model of the hardwood lumber market. North- 

 eastern Forest Experiment Station, Forest Service, U.S. Dept. of Agric, Res. Pap. NE-512. 15p. 



